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I Applaud SirHorneyToad!:)
I just cannot imagine not being affiliated with a Greek Organization. Why: Just going to classes, library, student center, home. While this may not be tru fro everyone, I have found while the Educational portion is the reason to go to College, being a memember of a Greek Organization is a much more well rounding situation. Why: Having the opportunity to work with a larger group for interaction. Working on specific events helping each other. Becoming an Officer and helping to lead others. Having more people to turn to for help when in need. After shool life in the real working world, I have Brothers/Sisters gathering, calling, doing projects together. Sure, I made friends working at Macy's, Penneys, KCKPD, Winer, Distillery, Wholesaler, but, I dont keep in touch and do with any of them. The Brothers of LXA, I would have to make a long list! Then, to throw in Brothers/Sisters of the many Greek Organizations I have met on GC. Just for me, That Is What Being a Part of Greek Life is really all about!:cool: Hazing to me has no place in Greek Organizations at all. If I am good enough to be selected into an Organization they why should I be Demeaned or anyone else. I want to be A Brother/Sister for life, not just 4-5 years if that long. Oh hell, just to long a post!:( |
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It was great to be a part of Greek life, and no doubt something like this would disappoint me; however, when was all said and done, I went to Boston U. for my education with Greek life as a nice bonus. |
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Many of us go to school for school. Everything else is a luxury. We get good jobs and give back to our organizations and schools. Heck I've given quite a bit to Chicago and to AEPi. The school and fraternity are not the end all, be all of my life unlike for some I guess. -Rudey |
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Greek life is great, but there's life beyond being Greek. |
Yes, but greek life is part of my life, and i wouldnt have it any other way, i get great grades, and of course school comes first, but my brothers come second, and if theres no fraternity then there's no greek life, so i'd move somewhere that had it. that is if i was a freshman or sophmore, now i've got 2 semesters left and i'm outta this bitch haha
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=SO= If your brothers really are second in your list of collegiate priorities, why would you just leave them for a school that had an active chapter so you can live the so-called life you said you have earned? Even though it is no longer an active chapter, these are the guys you pledged with, and "grew" with while your days @ college. I don't have anything against transferring schools or meeting brothers in another chapter you didn't know before, but to purposely leave the brothers @ your chapter for the sole reason of going out and doing the greek life thing at another school with an active chapter is pretty selfish... not at all what most of our GLOs teach us to be ;) There's nothing wrong with hanging out with the same guys... I'm sure the group would party just as much. You probably wouldn't be able to participate in Greek Week or Homecoming, but you'll probably still have a party to celebrate it :p I know this is all a hypothetical thing, but oh well! Also - I guess this is another question -- what happens to members of a GLO when a chapter is shut down? Are their memberships revoked? Do they automatically go alum? Maybe it depends on why the chapter was closed? So if you were a member and your chapter got the chartered pulled, and you were "forced" to go alum, I highly doubt a new chapter would be able to take you in.. even if you did transfer schools. |
well that goes back to the original question, go underground or leave. Even if school is first, what school? If i'm gonna have the same degree at another school as i would have here and i can still get good grades then what do i care if i don't have X university on my diploma? My grades come first on my list of priorities, but for my list of loyalty my brothers would be way ahead of my alma mater, and i would encourage all of my brothers to transfer too if it could be done even to the same school if possible, it wouldnt be a question of ditching my brothers it would mostly be a question of being dissatisfied with the university. Regardless 2 semesters more and it wouldnt matter for me anyway =P
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Of course overlooking one important thing. Many, many times, when a chapter shuts down, most (if not all) members are made alumni , only to be in good standing after a period of so many years. Transferring to another chapter may not be an option allowed by the national, to keep the problem members that got one chapter shut down from contaminating another chapter.
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Q. What happens to members of a GLO when a chapter is shut down? A. Each GLO has their own guidelines, By-laws, etc. so it would depend on the GLO. And depend on what is meant by 'shut down'. And why. 'Shut down' may mean that the charter is pulled by the inter/national HQ; or it may mean that the chapter is 'kicked-off' (removed) by the campus administration; it may mean that the chapter may have been suspended or put on probation for a certain period of time. Again, by either the GLO HQ or by the college. The situation usually dictates what the current members status will be. Q. Are their memberships revoked? A. Depends on the severity of the violation or situation. Severe reasons or issues may (often) result in termination. It may be that only certain members of the chapter get their membership revoked - the ones in violation of the GLO's policy - i.e. some memberships revoked, other memberships are not. Q. Do they automatically go alum? A. If the chapter is indefinitely 'shut down' (closed/charter pulled) and the member is in good standing with their GLO (criteria met for alum status i.e. dues paid etc.) then this is the usual case. If the chapter is on probation or suspended, then it may be that members are 'inactive'. Once the chapter is reestablished, they are considered active. Again, depends on the GLO's By-laws. Q. Maybe it depends on why the chapter was closed? A. Yes. In some cases, a chapter may be put on probation or suspended (whatever term the GLO uses) by the college and or their inter/national HQ for a period of time. In some of these situations, the chapter may be allowed to hold meetings and even do philanthropy work, but may not participate in what may be considered the social part of Greek life - i.e. exchanges, mixers, intramural, Greek Week etc. In some cases, the chapter may loose their vote on any Greek Council they are on (still have a representative) for the duration of the probation. In some cases, if the chapter has a university owned house, they may have to vacate the house for the duration of the suspension as well. In some situations, members may be considered 'active' while in other situations, 'inactive'. Again, it depends on the particular GLO's By-laws. If the GLO HQ is 'cleaning house' then they may decide to 'force' members to go alum and then recruit all new members for the chapter. In this last scenario, usually the charter is not revoked. ~It really does boil down to why a chapter is closed as to what status the current members will have. |
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Could a member (in good standing) petition their HQ to be allowed to remain active but at another chapter? For example. Say there is a sophomore member who is studying abroad for a semester. While he was out of the county, the chapter was closed due to violations by others and were specific to *that* semester. i.e. the member had nothing to do with the reason why it was closed. The member returns, and as was planned when he started his college career, transfers to another college (that has a chapter of his GLO) for his degree. i.e. he was going to do two years at a local college then transfer to State U. to finish his degree. In this scenario, for example, would (should?) he be able to affiliate with State U.'s chapter? edted for spelling |
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He said that the brotherhood actually grew stronger during this time. They really bonded together and worked as a group to get their grades back. They also didn't want to be known as the members who allowed the chapter to fold. |
It's possible depending on the individual's circumstances, but I think most orgs would look at this on a case by case basis. I wouldn't say there is any particular rule of thumb for this.
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